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Sociology: A Down-To-Earth Approach -- Loose-Leaf Edition 14th ed. [Loose-leaf]

(Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville)
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  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Feb-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0134740009
  • ISBN-13: 9780134740003
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  • Formāts: Loose-leaf, 800 pages, height x width x depth: 276x216x28 mm, weight: 1374 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Feb-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Pearson
  • ISBN-10: 0134740009
  • ISBN-13: 9780134740003
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
You can also purchase a loose-leaf print reference to complement Revel Sociology: A Down to Earth Approach . This is optional.
To the Student...from the Author xx
To the Instructor...from the Author xxi
About the Author xxxviii
1 The Sociological Perspective 1(32)
The Sociological Perspective
3(2)
Seeing The Broader Social Context
3(1)
The Global Context-and The Local
4(1)
Sociology And The Other Sciences
5(3)
The Natural Sciences
5(1)
The Social Sciences
5(2)
Anthropology
6(1)
Economics
6(1)
Political Science
6(1)
Psychology
6(1)
Sociology
6(1)
The Goals Of Science
7(1)
The Risks Of Being A Sociologist
8(1)
Origins Of Sociology
8(6)
Tradition Versus Science
8(1)
Auguste Comte And Positivism
9(1)
Herbert Spencer And Social Darwinism
9(1)
Karl Marx And Class Conflict
10(1)
Emile Durkheim And Social Integration
11(1)
Applying Durkheim
12(1)
Max Weber And The Protestant Ethic
13(2)
Religion And The Origin Of Capitalism
13(1)
Values In Sociological Research
14(1)
Verstehen And Social Facts
15(1)
Weber And Verstehen
15(1)
Durkheim And Social Facts
15(1)
How Social Facts And Verstehen Fit Together
16(1)
Sociology In North America
16(8)
Sexism At The Time: Women In Early Sociology
16(3)
Racism At The Time: W.E.B. Du Bois
19(1)
Jane Addams: Sociologist And Social Reformer
20(1)
Talcott Parsons And C. Wright Mills: Theory Versus Reform
21(1)
The Continuing Tension: Basic, Applied, And Public Sociology
21(3)
Basic Sociology
21(1)
Applied Sociology
21(2)
Public Sociology
23(1)
Social Reform Is Risky
23(1)
Theoretical Perspectives In Sociology
24(6)
Symbolic Interactionism
24(2)
Symbols In Everyday Life
24(1)
Applying Symbolic Interactionism
25(1)
Functional Analysis
26(1)
Robert Merton And Functionalism
26(1)
Applying Functional Analysis
27(1)
Conflict Theory
27(2)
Karl Marx And Conflict Theory
27(1)
Conflict Theory Today
28(1)
Feminists And Conflict Theory
29(1)
Applying Conflict Theory
29(1)
Putting The Theoretical Perspectives Together
29(1)
Levels Of Analysis: Macro And Micro
29(1)
Trends Shaping The Future Of Sociology
30(1)
Tension In Sociology: Research Versus Reform
30(1)
Three Stages In Sociology
30(1)
Diversity Of Orientations
30(1)
Globalization
31(4)
How Globalization Applies To This Text
31(1)
Summary And Review
31(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 1
32(1)
2 Culture 33(30)
What Is Culture?
35(6)
Culture And Taken-For-Granted Orientations To Life
35(3)
Practicing Cultural Relativism
38(3)
Attack On Cultural Relativism
39(2)
Components Of Symbolic Culture
41(7)
Gestures
41(1)
Misunderstanding And Offense
41(1)
Universal Gestures?
42(1)
Language
42(3)
Language Allows Human Experience To Be Cumulative
43(1)
Language Provides A Social Or Shared Past
43(1)
Language Provides A Social Or Shared Future
43(1)
Language Allows Shared Perspectives
43(1)
Language Allows Shared, Goal-Directed Behavior
44(1)
Language And Perception: The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis
45(1)
Values, Norms, And Sanctions
46(1)
Folkways, Mores, And Taboos
47(1)
Many Cultural Worlds
48(3)
Subcultures
48(3)
Countercultures
51(1)
Values In U.S. Society
51(4)
An Overview Of U.S. Values
51(1)
Value Clusters
52(1)
Value Contradictions
53(1)
An Emerging Value Cluster
53(2)
When Values Clash
55(1)
Values As Distorting Lenses
55(1)
"Weal" Culture Versus "Real" Culture
55(1)
Cultural Universals
55(1)
Sociobiology And Human Behavior
56(1)
Technology In The Global Village
57(4)
New Technology
57(2)
Cultural Lag And Cultural. Change
59(1)
Technology And Cultural Leveling
59(6)
Cultural Diffusion
59(1)
Communication And Travel
60(1)
Cultural Leveling
60(1)
Summary And Review
61(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 2
62(1)
3 Socialization 63(33)
Society Makes Us Human
65(4)
Feral Children
66(1)
Isolated Children
66(1)
Institutionalized Children
67(1)
The Orphanage Experiment In The United States
67(1)
The Orphanage Experiment In Romania
68(1)
Timing And Human Development: The Case Of Genie
68(1)
Deprived Animals
68(1)
Socialization Into The Self And Mind
69(3)
Cooley And The Looking-Glass Self
69(1)
Mead And Role Taking
70(1)
Piaget And The Development Of Reasoning
71(1)
Global Aspects Of The Self And Reasoning
72(1)
Learning Personality, Morality And Emotions
72(4)
Freud And The Development Of Personality
72(1)
Sociological Evaluation
73(1)
Kohlberg And The Development Of Morality
73(1)
Kohlberg's Theory
73(1)
Criticisms Of Kohlberg
74(1)
Research With Babies
74(1)
The Cultural Relativity Of Morality
74(1)
Socialization Into Emotions
74(2)
Global Emotions
74(1)
Expressing Emotions: "Gender Rules"
74(1)
The Extent Of "Feeling Rules"
75(1)
What We Feel
75(1)
Research Needed
75(1)
Society Within Us: The Self And Emotions As A Social Mirror
76(1)
Socialization Into Gender
76(5)
Learning The Gender Map
76(1)
Gender Messages In The Family
77(2)
Parents
77(1)
Toys And Play
77(2)
Same-Sex Parents
79(1)
Gender Messages From Peers
79(1)
Gender Messages In The Mass Media
80(1)
Television, Movies, And Cartoons
80(1)
Video Games
80(1)
Advertising
80(1)
Agents Of Socialization
81(6)
The Family
82(1)
Social Class And Type Of Work
82(1)
Social Class And Play
82(1)
The Neighborhood
82(1)
Religion
83(1)
Day Care
83(1)
The School
84(1)
Peer Groups
85(2)
The Workplace
87(1)
Resocialization
87(2)
Total Institutions
87(2)
Socialization Through The Life Course
89(5)
Childhood (From Birth To About Age 12)
89(1)
Adolescence (Ages 13-17)
90(1)
Transitional Adulthood (Ages 18-29)
91(1)
"Bring Your Parents To Work Day"
91(1)
The Middle Years (Ages 30-65)
91(1)
The Early Middle Years (Ages 30-49)
91(1)
The Later Middle Years (Ages 50-65)
92(1)
The Older Years (About Age 65 On)
92(1)
The Transitional Older Years (Ages 65-74)
92(1)
The Later Older Years (Age 75 Or So)
92(1)
Are We Prisoners Of Socialization?
93(1)
Summary And Review
94(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 3
95(1)
4 Social Structure And Social Interaction 96(32)
Levels Of Sociological Analysis
98(1)
Macrosociology And Microsociology
98(1)
The Macrosociological Perspective: Social Structure
99(1)
The Sociological Significance Of Social Structure
99(1)
Components Of Social Structure
100(4)
Culture
101(1)
Social Class
101(1)
Social Status
101(2)
Status Sets
101(1)
Ascribed And Achieved Statuses
101(1)
Status Symbols
102(1)
Master Statuses
102(1)
Status Inconsistency
102(1)
Roles
103(1)
Groups
103(1)
Social Institutions
104(2)
Comparing Functionalist And Conflict Perspectives
104(2)
The Functionalist Perspective
104(2)
The Conflict Perspective
106(1)
Changes In Social Structure
106(3)
What Holds Society Together?
106(3)
Mechanical And Organic Solidarity
106(1)
Gemeinschaft And Gesellschaft
107(1)
How Relevant Are These Concepts Today?
107(2)
The Microsociological Perspective: Social Interaction In Everyday Life
109(1)
Symbolic Interaction
109(5)
Stereotypes In Everyday Life
109(4)
Personal Space
113(1)
Eye Contact
114(1)
Smiling
114(1)
Body Language
114(1)
Applied Body Language
114(1)
Dramaturgy: The Presentation Of Self In Everyday Life
114(5)
Stages
115(1)
Role Performance, Conflict, And Strain
115(1)
Sign-Vehicles
116(2)
Teamwork
118(1)
Becoming The Roles We Play
118(2)
Applying Impression Management
118(1)
Ethnomethodology: Uncovering Background Assumptions
119(1)
The Social Construction Of Reality
120(2)
Gynecological Examinations
121(1)
The Need For Both Macrosociology And Microsociology
122(4)
Summary And Review
126(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 4
127(1)
5 How Sociologists Do Research 128(21)
What Is A Valid Sociological Topic?
130(1)
Common Sense And The Need For Sociological Research
130(3)
A Research Model
130(1)
1 Selecting A Topic
130(1)
2 Defining The Problem
131(1)
3 Reviewing The Literature
131(1)
4 Formulating A Hypothesis
131(1)
5 Choosing A Research Method
131(1)
6 Collecting The Data
131(1)
7 Analyzing The Results
132(1)
8 Sharing The Results
132(1)
Research Methods (Designs)
133(10)
Surveys
134(3)
Selecting A Sample
134(1)
Asking Neutral Questions
134(2)
Questionnaires And Interviews
136(1)
Establishing Rapport
136(1)
Participant Observation (Fieldwork)
137(2)
Case Studies
139(1)
Secondary Analysis
139(1)
Analysis Of Documents
139(1)
Experiments
140(1)
Unobtrusive Measures
141(1)
Deciding Which Method To Use
142(1)
Controversy In Sociological Research
142(1)
Gender In Sociological Research
143(1)
Ethics In Sociological Research
144(2)
Protecting The Subjects: The Brajuha Research
144(1)
Misleading The Subjects: The Humphreys Research
145(1)
How Research And Theory Work Together
146(1)
The Real. World: When The Ideal Meets The Real
146(1)
Connecting Research And Theory
147(1)
Summary And Review
147(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 5
148(1)
6 Societies To Social Networks 149(26)
Societies And Their Transformation
151(5)
Hunting And Gathering Societies
151(2)
Pastoral And Horticultural Societies
153(1)
Agricultural Societies
153(1)
Industrial Societies
154(1)
Postindustrial (Information) Societies
154(1)
Biotech Societies: Is A New Type Of Society Emerging?
155(1)
Groups Within Society
156(8)
Primary Groups
157(1)
Producing A Mirror Within
157(1)
Secondary Groups
157(2)
In-Groups And Out-Groups
159(1)
Shaping Perception And Morality
159(1)
Reference Groups
160(1)
Evaluating Ourselves
160(1)
Exposure To Contradictory Standards In A Diverse Society
160(1)
Social Networks
160(4)
The Small World Phenomenon
162(1)
Is The Small World Phenomenon An Academic Myth?
162(1)
Building Unintentional Barriers
163(1)
Group Dynamics
164(9)
Effects Of Group Size On Stability And Intimacy
164(1)
Effects Of Group Size On Attitudes And Behavior
165(3)
Laboratory Findings And The Real World
166(2)
Leadership
168(2)
Who Becomes A Leader?
168(1)
Types Of Leaders
169(1)
Leadership Styles
169(1)
Leadership Styles In Changing Situations
169(1)
The Power Of Peer Pressure: The Asch Experiment
170(1)
The Power Of Authority: The Milgram Experiment
171(1)
Individual And Global Consequences Of Group Dynamics: Groupthink
172(5)
Preventing Groupthink
173(1)
Summary And Review
173(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 6
174(1)
7 Bureaucracy And Formal Organizations 175(24)
The Rationalization Of Society
177(3)
Why Did Society Make A Deep Shift In Human Relationships?
177(2)
Life In Traditional Societies
177(1)
The Shift To Rationality As Societies Industrialized
178(1)
Marx: Capitalism Broke Tradition
179(1)
Weber: Religion Broke Tradition
179(1)
The Two Views Today
180(1)
Formal Organizations And Bureaucracies
180(8)
Formal Organizations
180(1)
The Characteristics Of Bureaucracies
181(2)
"Ideal" Versus "Real" Bureaucracy
183(1)
Goal Displacement And The Perpetuation Of Bureaucracies
184(1)
Dysfunctions Of Bureaucracies
185(1)
Red Tape: A Rule Is A Rule
185(1)
Lack Of Communication Between Units
186(1)
Bureaucratic Incompetence
186(1)
Alienation Of Workers
186(1)
Causes Of Alienation
186(1)
The Alienated Bureaucrat
187(1)
Resisting Alienation
187(1)
Finding Success At Work
187(1)
Voluntary Associations
188(3)
Functions Of Voluntary Associations
189(1)
Motivations For Joining
190(1)
The Inner Circle And The "Iron Law" Of Oligarchy
190(1)
The Inner Circle
190(1)
The Iron Law Of Oligarchy
190(1)
Working For The Corporation
191(5)
Humanizing The Work Setting
192(1)
Empowering Workers Through Work Teams
192(1)
Strengths-Based Management
192(1)
Corporate Child Care
192(1)
The Conflict Perspective
193(1)
Fads In Corporate Culture
193(1)
Self-Fulfilling Stereotypes In The "Hidden" Corporate Culture
194(1)
Self-Fulfilling Stereotypes And Promotions
194(1)
Diversity In The Workplace
194(2)
Technology And The Maximum-Security Society
196(1)
Summary And Review
197(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 7
198(1)
8 Deviance And Social Control 199(33)
What Is Deviance?
201(3)
A Neutral Term
201(1)
Stigma
201(1)
Deviance Is Relative
201(2)
How Norms Make Social Life Possible
203(1)
Sanctions
203(1)
Competing Explanations Of Deviance: Sociobiology, Psychology, And Sociology
204(1)
Biosocial Explanations
204(1)
Psychological Explanations
204(1)
Sociological Explanations
205(1)
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
205(7)
Differential Association Theory
205(2)
The Theory
205(1)
Families
205(1)
Friends, Neighborhoods, And Subcultures
205(1)
Differential Association In The Cyber Age
206(1)
Prison Or Freedom?
206(1)
Control Theory
207(2)
The Theory
207(2)
Labeling Theory
209(3)
Rejecting Labels: How People Neutralize Deviance
209(1)
Embracing Labels: The Example Of Outlaw Bikers
210(1)
Labels Can Be Powerful
210(1)
How Do Labels Work?
211(1)
The Functionalist Perspective
212(5)
Can Deviance Really Be Functional For Society?
212(1)
Strain Theory: How Mainstream Values Produce Deviance
212(1)
Four Deviant Paths
213(1)
Illegitimate Opportunity Structures: Social Class And Crime
213(4)
Street Crime
213(2)
White-Collar Crime
215(1)
Gender And Crime
216(1)
The Conflict Perspective
217(1)
Class, Crime, And The Criminal Justice System
217(1)
The Criminal Justice System As An Instrument Of Oppression
217(1)
Reactions To Deviance
218(12)
Street Crime And Prisons
219(3)
The Decline Of Violent Crime
222(1)
Recidivism
222(1)
The Death Penalty And Bias
223(4)
Geography
224(1)
Social Class
225(1)
Gender
225(1)
Race-Ethnicity
225(2)
The Trouble With Official Statistics
227(1)
The Medicalization Of Deviance: Mental Illness
228(2)
Neither Mental Nor Illness?
228(1)
The Homeless Mentally Ill
229(1)
The Need For A More Humane Approach
230(1)
Summary And Review
230(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 8
231(1)
9 Global Stratification 232(33)
Systems Of Social Stratification
234(8)
Slavery
235(2)
Causes Of Slavery
235(1)
Conditions Of Slavery
236(1)
Bonded Labor In The New World
236(1)
Slavery In The New World
236(1)
Slavery Today
237(1)
Caste
237(3)
India's Religious Castes
237(1)
South Africa
238(1)
A U.S. Racial Caste System
239(1)
Estate
240(1)
Women In The Estate System
240(1)
Class
241(1)
Global Stratification And The Status Of Females
241(1)
The Global Superclass
241(1)
What Determines Social Class?
242(1)
Karl Marx: The Means Of Production
242(1)
Max Weber: Property, Power, And Prestige
243(1)
Why Is Social Stratification Universal?
243(4)
The Functionalist View: Motivating Qualified People
244(1)
Davis And Moore's Explanation
244(1)
Tumin's Critique Of Davis And Moore
244(1)
The Conflict Perspective: Class Conflict And Scarce Resources
245(1)
Mosca's Argument
245(1)
Marx's Argument
246(1)
Current Applications Of Conflict Theory
246(1)
Lenski's Synthesis
246(1)
How Do Elites Maintain Stratification?
247(2)
Soft Control Versus Force
247(2)
Controlling People's Ideas
247(1)
Controlling Information
248(1)
Stifling Criticism
248(1)
Big Brother Technology
248(1)
Comparative Social Stratification
249(1)
Social Stratification In Great Britain
249(1)
Social Stratification In The Former Soviet Union
249(1)
Global Stratification: Three Worlds
250(8)
The Most Industrialized Nations
251(3)
The Industrializing Nations
254(1)
The Least Industrialized Nations
255(1)
Modifying The Model
255(3)
How Did The World's Nations Become Stratified?
258(3)
Colonialism
258(1)
World System Theory
259(1)
Culture Of Poverty
260(1)
Evaluating The Theories
260(1)
Maintaining Global Stratification
261(2)
Neocolonialism
261(1)
Relevance Today
261(1)
Multinational Corporations
261(1)
Buying Political Stability
262(1)
Unanticipated Consequences
262(1)
Technology And Global Domination
262(1)
Strains In The Global System: Uneasy Realignments
263(1)
Summary And Review
263(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 9
264(1)
10 Social Class In The United States 265(35)
What Is Social Class?
267(8)
Property
267(4)
Distinguishing Between Wealth And Income
267(1)
Distribution Of Property
268(1)
Distribution Of Income
268(3)
Power
271(1)
The Democratic Facade
271(1)
The Power Elite
271(1)
Prestige
272(1)
Occupations And Prestige
272(1)
Displaying Prestige
272(1)
Status Inconsistency
273(2)
Sociological Models Of Social Class
275(4)
Updating Marx
275(1)
Updating Weber
276(3)
The Capitalist Class
277(1)
The Upper-Middle Class
277(1)
The Lower-Middle Class
278(1)
The Working Class
278(1)
The Working Poor
278(1)
The Underclass
279(1)
Consequences Of Social Class
279(4)
Physical Health
280(1)
Mental Health
281(1)
Family Life
281(1)
Choice Of Husband Or Wife
281(1)
Divorce
281(1)
Child Rearing
281(1)
Education
282(1)
Religion
282(1)
Politics
282(1)
Crime And Criminal Justice
283(1)
Social Mobility
283(5)
Three Types Of Social Mobility
283(2)
Women In Studies Of Social Mobility
285(1)
The Pain Of Social Mobility: Two Distinct Worlds
286(2)
Poverty
288(6)
Drawing The Poverty Line
288(2)
Who Are The Poor?
290(2)
Breaking A Myth
290(1)
The Geography Of Poverty
290(1)
Education
291(1)
Family Structure: The Feminization Of Poverty
291(1)
Race-Ethnicity
291(1)
Age And Poverty
292(1)
Children Of Poverty
292(2)
The Dynamics Of Poverty Versus The Culture Of Poverty
294(3)
Why Are People Poor?
294(1)
Deferred Gratification
294(2)
Where Is Horatio Alger? The Social Functions Of A Myth
296(1)
Peering Into The Future: Will We Live In A Three-Tier Society?
297(1)
Summary And Review
298(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 10
299(1)
11 Sex And Gender 300(33)
Sex, Gender, And Inequality
302(4)
The Sociological Significance Of Gender: Opening And Closing Doors To Property, Power, And Prestige
302(1)
Gender Differences In Behavior: Biology Or Culture?
302(2)
The Dominant Position In Sociology
304(1)
Opening The Door To Biology
304(2)
A Medical Accident
304(1)
The Vietnam Veterans Study
305(1)
More Research On Humans
305(1)
Gender Inequality In Global Perspective
306(8)
How Did Females Become A Minority Group?
307(2)
Human Reproduction
308(1)
Hand-To-Hand Combat
308(1)
Which One?
309(1)
Continuing Dominance
309(1)
Sex Typing Of Work
309(3)
Gender And The Prestige Of Work
312(1)
Other Areas Of Global Discrimination
312(2)
The Global Gap In Politics
312(1)
The Global Gap In Education
312(1)
The Global Gap In Pay
312(1)
Global Violence Against Women
312(2)
Gender Inequality In The United States
314(8)
Fighting Back: The Rise Of Feminism
314(3)
Gender Inequality In Everyday Life
317(1)
Devaluation Of Things Feminine
317(1)
Gender Inequality In Health Care
317(2)
Gender Inequality In Education
319(3)
The Past
319(1)
A Fundamental Change
319(1)
Gender Tracking
320(1)
Graduate School And Beyond
321(1)
Gender Inequality In The Workplace
322(5)
The Pay Gap
322(4)
Historical Background
322(1)
Geographical Factors
322(1)
The "Testosterone Bonus"
323(1)
Reasons For The Gender Pay Gap
324(1)
The Ceo Power Gap-And The New Female Premium
325(1)
Is The Glass Ceiling Cracking?
326(1)
And The Future?
327(1)
Sexual Harassment-and Worse
327(1)
Labels And Perception
327(1)
Not Just A "Man Thing"
327(1)
Sexual Orientation
327(1)
Gender And Violence
327(2)
Violence Against Women
327(8)
Forcible Rape
327(1)
Date (Acquaintance) Rape
328(1)
Murder
329(1)
Violence In The Home
329(1)
Feminism And Gendered Violence
329(1)
Solutions
329(1)
The Changing Face Of Politics
329(1)
Glimpsing The Future-with Hope
330(1)
Summary And Review
331(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 11
332(1)
12 Race And Ethnicity 333(40)
Laying The Sociological Foundation
335(5)
Race: Reality And Myth
335(4)
The Reality Of Human Variety
335(1)
The Myth Of Pure Races
335(1)
The Myth Of A Fixed Number Of Races
336(1)
The Myth Of Racial Superiority
337(1)
The Myth Continues
338(1)
Ethnic Groups
339(1)
Minority Groups And Dominant Groups
339(1)
Not Size, But Dominance And Discrimination
339(1)
Emergence Of Minority Groups
339(1)
Ethnic Work: Constructing Our Racial-ethnic Identity
340(1)
Prejudice And Discrimination
340(6)
Learning Prejudice
340(5)
Distinguishing Between Prejudice And Discrimination
342(1)
Learning Prejudice From Associating With Others
342(1)
The Far-Reaching Nature Of Prejudice
343(2)
Internalizing Dominant Norms
345(1)
Individual And Institutional. Discrimination
345(1)
Home Mortgages
345(1)
Health Care
346(1)
Theories Of Prejudice
346(5)
Psychological Perspectives
347(1)
Frustration And Scapegoats
347(1)
The Authoritarian Personality
347(1)
Sociological Perspectives
348(3)
Functionalism
348(1)
Conflict Theory
348(1)
Symbolic Interactionism
349(1)
How Labels Create Prejudice
349(1)
Labels And Self-Fulfilling Stereotypes
349(2)
Global Patterns Of Intergroup Relations
351(2)
Genocide
351(1)
Population Transfer
352(1)
Internal Colonialism
352(1)
Segregation
352(1)
Assimilation
353(1)
Multiculturalism (Pluralism)
353(1)
Racial-ethnic Relations In The United States
353(14)
European Americans
354(2)
Latinos (Hispanics)
356(4)
Umbrella Term
356(1)
Countries Of Origin
356(1)
Unauthorized Immigrants
357(1)
Residence
358(1)
Spanish
358(1)
Economic Wellbeing
359(1)
Politics
360(1)
African Americans
360(3)
Rising Expectations And Civil Strife
361(1)
Continued Gains
361(1)
Current Losses
362(1)
Race Or Social Class? A Sociological Debate
362(1)
Racism As An Everyday Burden
363(1)
Asian Americans
363(2)
A Background Of Discrimination
363(1)
Diversity
364(1)
Reasons For Financial Success
364(1)
Politics
364(1)
Native Americans
365(2)
Diversity Of Groups
365(1)
From Treaties To Genocide And Population Transfer
365(1)
The Invisible Minority And Self-Determination
366(1)
The Casinos
366(1)
Determining Identity And Goals
367(1)
Looking Toward The Future
367(3)
The Immigration Controversy
367(2)
The Affirmative Action Controversy
369(1)
A Brief History
369(1)
Supreme Court Rulings
369(1)
The Bamboo Curtain
369(1)
The Potential Solution
369(1)
Less Racism
370(1)
Toward A True Multicultural Society
370(1)
Summary And Review
370(2)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 12
372(1)
13 Aging And The Elderly 373(28)
Aging In Global Perspective
375(5)
The Social Construction Of Aging
375(1)
Industrialization And The Graying Of The Globe
376(1)
The Graying Of America
377(3)
Race-Ethnicity And Aging
379(1)
The Life Span
379(1)
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
380(4)
When Are You "Old"?
380(1)
Changing Perceptions As You Age
380(1)
Four Factors In Our Decision
380(1)
Changing Perceptions Of The Elderly
381(2)
Shifting Meanings
381(2)
The Influence Of The Mass Media
383(1)
The Functionalist Perspective
384(2)
Disengagement Theory
384(1)
Evaluation Of The Theory
384(1)
Activity Theory
385(1)
Evaluation Of The Theory
385(1)
Continuity Theory
385(1)
Evaluation Of The Theory
385(1)
The Conflict Perspective
386(5)
Fighting For Resources: Social Security Legislation
386(2)
"Old People Are Sucking Us Dry:" Intergenerational Competition And Conflict
388(2)
Fighting Back
390(1)
The Gray Panthers
390(1)
The American Association Of Retired Persons
391(1)
Recurring Problems
391(3)
Gender And Living Arrangements Of The Elderly
391(1)
Nursing Homes
391(2)
Understaffing, Dehumanization, And Death
392(1)
Elder Abuse
393(1)
The Elderly Poor
393(1)
Race-Ethnicity And Poverty
393(1)
Gender And Poverty
393(1)
The Sociology Of Death And Dying
394(3)
Industrialization And The New Technology
394(1)
Death As A Process
394(1)
Hospices
395(1)
Suicide And. Age
396(1)
Adjusting To Death: The Importance Of "Closure"
396(1)
Looking Toward The Future
397(2)
New Views: Creative Aging
397(1)
Creative Aging
397(1)
The Impact Of Technology
398(1)
Summary And Review
399(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 13
400(1)
14 The Economy 401(35)
The Transformation Of Economic Systems
403(4)
Preindustrial Societies: The Birth Of Inequality
403(1)
Industrial Societies: The Birth Of The Machine
403(1)
Postindustrial Societies: The Birth Of The Information Age
404(1)
Biotech Societies: The Merger Of Biology And Economics
404(1)
Implications For Your Life
405(2)
The Transformation Of The Medium Of Exchange
407(2)
Earliest Mediums Of Exchange
407(1)
Medium Of Exchange In Agricultural Societies
407(1)
Medium Of Exchange In Industrial Societies
407(2)
Medium Of Exchange In Postindustrial. Societies
409(1)
World Economic Systems
409(7)
Capitalism
410(1)
What Capitalism Is
410(1)
What State Capitalism Is
410(1)
The Development Of State Capitalism
411(1)
Socialism
411(1)
What Socialism Is
411(1)
Socialism In Practice
412(1)
Democratic Socialism
412(1)
Ideologies Of Capitalism And Socialism
412(1)
Criticisms Of Capitalism And Socialism
413(1)
The Convergence Of Capitalism And Socialism
414(2)
Changes In Socialism: Convergence
414(1)
Changes In Capitalism: Convergence
415(1)
Possible Transmergence
415(1)
The Functionalist Perspective On The Globalization Of Capitalism
416(5)
The New Global Division Of Labor
416(2)
Work Binds Us Together: Mechanical And Organic Solidarity
416(1)
The Global Division Of Labor
416(2)
Capitalism In A Global Economy
418(1)
Corporate Capitalism
418(1)
Separation Of Ownership And Management
418(1)
Functions And Dysfunctions On A Global Scale
418(3)
The Conflict Perspective On The Globalization Of Capitalism
421(4)
Making Capitalism Flourish: Profits And Self-Interest
421(1)
Connections Between Business And Politics
421(1)
Corporate Power And Conspiracies
421(1)
Multiplying Power: Interlocking Directorships
422(1)
The Global Superclass
422(1)
Shifting Dominance And Power
422(1)
Global Investing
423(2)
Work In U.S. Society
425(7)
The Transition To Postindustrial Society
425(1)
Women And Work
426(3)
The Quiet Revolution
426(2)
Female-Male Work Styles
428(1)
The Underground Economy
429(1)
Stagnant Paychecks
429(1)
Patterns Of Work And Leisure
430(2)
Work And Leisure And The Transformation Of Economies
430(1)
Trends In Leisure
431(1)
Telework
431(1)
The Mobile Shift
431(1)
Global Capitalism And Our Future
432(1)
The New Economic System And The Old Divisions Of Wealth
432(1)
Summary And Review
433(2)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 14
435(1)
15 Politics 436(32)
Micropolitics And Macropolitics
438(1)
Power, Authority, And Violence
438(4)
Authority And Legitimate Violence
439(1)
The Collapse Of Authority
439(1)
Traditional Authority
440(1)
Rational-legal Authority
440(1)
Charismatic Authority
441(1)
The Threat Posed By Charismatic Leaders
441(1)
Authority As Ideal Type
441(1)
The Transfer Of Authority
442(1)
Types Of Government
442(3)
Monarchies: The Rise Of The State
442(1)
Democracies: Citizenship As A Revolutionary Idea
443(2)
Dictatorships And Oligarchies: The Seizure Of Power
445(1)
The U.S. Political System
445(8)
Political Parties And Elections
445(1)
Polling And Predictions
446(2)
Slices From The Center
447(1)
Third Parties
447(1)
Contrast With Democratic Systems In Europe
448(1)
Voting Patterns
448(4)
Social Integration
451(1)
Alienation
451(1)
Apathy
451(1)
The Gender And Racial-Ethnic Gaps In Voting
451(1)
Lobbyists And Special-Interest Groups
452(1)
Lobbying By Special-Interest Groups
452(1)
The Money
452(1)
Who Rules The United States?
453(3)
The Functionalist Perspective: Pluralism
453(1)
The Conflict Perspective: The Power Elite
454(1)
Which View Is Right?
455(1)
War And Terrorism: Implementing Political Objectives
456(9)
Is War Universal?
456(1)
How Common Is War?
456(1)
Why Countries Go To War
457(1)
The War Machine And The Profits Of War
457(2)
Costs Of War
459(1)
A Special Cost Of War: Dehumanization
459(2)
Success And Failure Of Dehumanization
460(1)
Terrorism
461(3)
Sowing The Seeds Of Future Violence
464(1)
4/5: Selling War Technology
464(1)
Alignments And Disalignments
465(1)
What Lies Ahead? A New World Order?
465(1)
Unity And Disunity
465(1)
Inevitable Changes
466(1)
Summary And Review
466(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 15
467(1)
16 Marriage And Family 468(34)
Marriage And Family In Global Perspective
470(3)
What Is A Family?
470(1)
What Is Marriage?
471(1)
Common Cultural Themes
471(2)
Mate Selection
471(2)
Descent
473(1)
Inheritance
473(1)
Authority
473(1)
Marriage And Family In Theoretical Perspective
473(3)
The Functionalist Perspective: Functions And Dysfunctions
473(1)
Why The Family Is Universal
474(1)
Functions Of The Incest Taboo
474(1)
Isolation And Emotional Overload
474(1)
The Conflict Perspective: Struggles Between Husbands And Wives
474(1)
Inevitable Conflict
474(1)
Changing Power Relations
474(1)
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective: Gender, Housework, And Child Care
475(1)
Changes In Traditional Gender Orientations
475(1)
Paid Work And Housework
475(1)
More Child Care
476(1)
Total Hours
476(1)
A Gender Division Of Labor
476(1)
The Family Life Cycle
476(9)
Love And Courtship In Global Perspective
476(2)
Marriage
478(1)
The Social Channels Of Love And Marriage
478(1)
Childbirth
479(2)
Ideal Family Size
479(2)
Marital Satisfaction After Childbirth
481(1)
Child Rearing
481(3)
Married Couples And Single Mothers
481(1)
Single Fathers
481(1)
Day Care
481(1)
Nannies
482(1)
Social Class
482(1)
Helicopter Parenting
483(1)
The Right Way To Rear Children
483(1)
Family Transitions
484(1)
Transitional Adulthood
484(1)
Widowhood
484(1)
Diversity In U.S. Families
485(7)
African American Families
485(1)
Latino Families
486(1)
Asian American Families
487(1)
Native American Families
487(1)
One-Parent Families
488(1)
Couples Without Children
488(1)
Blended Families
489(1)
Gay And Lesbian Families
489(1)
Children Reared By Gay And Lesbian Couples
489(1)
Trends In U.S. Families
490(1)
The Changing Timetable Of Family Life: Marriage And Childbirth
490(1)
Cohabitation
491(1)
Cohabitation And Marriage: The Essential Difference
491(1)
Does Cohabitation Make Marriage Stronger?
492(1)
The "Sandwich Generation" And Elder Care
492(1)
Divorce And Remarriage
492(5)
Ways Of Measuring Divorce
492(2)
Divorce And Mixed Racial-ethnic Marriages
494(1)
Symbolic Interactionism And The Misuse Of Statistics
494(1)
Children Of Divorce
495(1)
Negative Effects
495(1)
What Helps Children Adjust To Divorce?
495(1)
Perpetuating Divorce
496(1)
Grandchildren Of Divorce: Ripples To The Future
496(1)
Fathers' Contact With Children After Divorce
496(1)
The Ex-Spouses
496(1)
Remarriage: "I Do" Again And Again
497(1)
Two Sides Of Family Life
497(2)
The Dark Side Of Family Life: Battering, Child Abuse, Marital Rape, And Incest
497(1)
Spouse Battering
497(1)
Child Abuse
497(1)
Marital And Intimacy Rape
498(1)
Incest
498(1)
The Bright Side Of Family Life: Successful Marriages
498(6)
Successful Marriages
499(1)
The Future Of Marriage And Family
499(1)
Summary And Review
500(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 16
501(1)
17 Education 502(28)
The Development Of Modern Education
504(3)
Education In Earlier Societies
504(1)
Industrialization And Universal Education
504(3)
Hodgepodge Education And National Disunity
505(1)
Industrialization And Mandatory Education
505(1)
The Expansion Of Education
505(2)
Education In Global Perspective
507(3)
Education In The Most Industrialized Nations: Japan
507(1)
Education In The Industrializing Nations: Russia
508(1)
Education In The Least Industrialized Nations: Egypt
509(1)
The Functionalist Perspective: Providing Social Benefits
510(4)
Teaching Knowledge And Skills
510(1)
Cultural Transmission Of Values
511(1)
Social Integration
511(1)
Integrating Immigrants
511(1)
Stabilizing Society: Maintaining The Status Quo
511(1)
Integrating People With Disabilities
511(1)
Gatekeeping (Social Placement)
512(1)
Replacing Family Functions
512(2)
Other Functions
514(1)
A Surprising Latent Function
514(1)
The Conflict Perspective: Perpetuating Social Inequality
514(4)
The Hidden Curriculum: Reproducing The Social Class Structure
514(2)
Tilting The Tests: Discrimination By IQ
516(1)
Stacking The Deck: Unequal Funding
516(1)
The Correspondence Principle
516(1)
The Bottom Line: Social Class And Race-Ethnicity
517(1)
Reproducing The Social Class Structure
517(1)
Reproducing The Racial-Ethnic Structure
518(1)
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective: Teacher Expectations
518(4)
The Rist Research
519(1)
The Rosenthal-Jacobson Experiment
519(1)
How Do Teacher Expectations Work?
520(1)
Self-Expectations
520(2)
Problems In U.S. Education-and Their Solutions
522(5)
Mediocrity
522(1)
The Rising Tide Of Mediocrity
522(1)
The SATs
523(1)
Grade Inflation, Social Promotion, And Functional Illiteracy
523(1)
Overcoming Mediocrity
523(1)
Raising Standards For Teachers
523(1)
A Warning About Higher Standards
524(1)
Cheating
524(1)
The Solution To Cheating
525(1)
Violence
525(2)
Technology And Education
527(1)
Summary And Review
528(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 17
529(1)
18 Religion 530(33)
What Is Religion?
532(1)
Durkheim's Research And Conclusions
532(1)
What Does Sociology Have To Do With Religion?
533(1)
The Functionalist Perspective
533(4)
Functions Of Religion
533(3)
Meaning And Purpose
533(1)
Emotional Comfort
533(1)
Social Solidarity
533(1)
Social Control
534(1)
Adaptation
534(1)
Support For The Government
534(1)
Social Change
535(1)
Guidelines For Everyday Life
535(1)
Functional Equivalents Of Religion
536(1)
Dysfunctions Of Religion
536(1)
Religion As Justification For Persecution, War, And Terrorism
536(1)
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
537(4)
Religious Symbols
537(3)
Rituals
540(1)
Beliefs
540(1)
Religious Experience
540(1)
Community
540(1)
Unity
540(1)
Exclusion
540(1)
The Conflict Perspective
541(1)
Opium Of The People
541(1)
Legitimating Social Inequalities
541(1)
Religion And The Spirit Of Capitalism
542(1)
The World's Major Religions
543(5)
Judaism
543(1)
Christianity
544(2)
Islam
546(1)
Hinduism
547(1)
Buddhism
547(1)
Confucianism
548(1)
Types Of Religious Groups
548(4)
Cult
549(2)
Sect
551(1)
Church
551(1)
Ecclesia
551(1)
Variations In Patterns
551(1)
When Religion And Culture Conflict
552(1)
Religion In The United States
552(8)
Characteristics Of Members
552(2)
Social Class
553(1)
Race-Ethnicity
553(1)
Characteristics Of Religious Groups
554(3)
Diversity
554(1)
Pluralism And Freedom
554(1)
Competition And Recruitment
555(1)
Commitment
555(1)
Toleration
555(1)
The Shrinkage Of The Mainstream Churches
555(1)
The Fundamentalist Revival
555(2)
The Electronic Church
557(1)
Secularization Of Religion And Culture
557(8)
The Secularization Of Religion And The Splintering Of Churches
557(2)
The Secularization Of Culture
559(1)
The Future Of Religion
560(1)
Summary And Review
561(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 18
562(1)
19 Medicine And Health 563(32)
The Symbolic Interactionist Perspective
565(1)
The Role Of Culture In Defining Health And .Illness
565(1)
The Components Of Health
565(1)
The Functionalist Perspective
566(1)
The Sick Role
566(1)
Elements Of The Sick Role
566(1)
Ambiguity In The Sick Role
566(1)
Gatekeepers To The Sick Role
567(1)
Gender Differences In The Sick Role
567(1)
The Conflict Perspective
567(5)
Global Stratification And Health Care
568(1)
Establishing A Monopoly On U.S. Health Care
569(3)
The Professionalization Of Medicine
569(1)
The Monopoly Of Medicine
570(2)
Historical Patterns Of Health
572(1)
Physical Health
572(1)
Leading Causes Of Death
572(1)
Were Americans Healthier In The Past?
572(1)
Mental Health
572(1)
Issues In Health Care
573(8)
Medical Care: A Right Or A Commodity?
573(1)
Skyrocketing Costs
573(1)
Social Inequality
574(1)
Reducing Inequalities Health Care Reform
574(1)
Malpractice Lawsuits And Defensive Medicine
575(1)
A Paradox
575(1)
Medical Incompetence
575(1)
Depersonalization: The Medical Cash Machine
576(1)
Conflict Of Interest
577(1)
Medical Fraud
577(1)
Sexism. And Racism In Medicine
578(1)
The Medicalization Of Society
578(1)
Theoretical Perspectives On Medicalizing Human Conditions
578(1)
Medically Assisted Suicide
579(1)
Reducing The Costs Of Medical Care
579(2)
Threats To Health
581(9)
Alcohol And Nicotine
581(3)
Alcohol
582(1)
Nicotine
583(1)
Medical Errors
584(1)
Using A Checklist
584(1)
Federal Center For Patient Safety
584(1)
HIV/AIDS
585(2)
Origin
585(1)
The Transmission Of HIV/AIDS
586(1)
Gender, Circumcision, And Race-Ethnicity
586(1)
The Stigma Of Aids
586(1)
Is There A Cure For Aids?
587(1)
Weight: Too Much And Too Little
587(1)
Disabling Environments
587(1)
Medical Experiments: Callous And Harmful
588(1)
The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment
588(1)
The Guatemalan Experiment
588(1)
The Cold War Experiments
588(1)
Playing God
589(1)
Chicken Bones And The Globalization Of Disease
589(2)
Rubbing Chicken Bones Together
590(1)
Treatment Or Prevention?
590(1)
The Future Of Medicine
591(2)
Alternative Medicine
591(1)
Technology
592(5)
A Teledoc In Your Future
592(1)
Personalized Digital Medicine
592(1)
Summary And Review
593(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 19
594(1)
20 Population And Urbanization 595(37)
Population In Global Perspective
597(1)
A Planet With No Space For Enjoying Life?
597(7)
The New Malthusians
597(2)
The Anti-Malthusians
599(1)
Who Is Correct?
600(1)
Why Are People Starving?
601(3)
Population Growth
604(8)
Why The Least Industrialized Nations Have So Many Children
604(1)
Consequences Of Rapid Population Growth
605(1)
Population Pyramids As A Tool For Understanding
606(1)
The Three Demographic Variables
607(2)
Fertility
607(1)
Mortality
607(1)
Migration
607(2)
Problems In Forecasting Population Growth
609(3)
Cities And City Life
612(3)
The Development Of Cities And Urbanization
615(2)
The Development Of Cities
615(1)
Urbanization
616(1)
The Appeal Of Cities
616(1)
Forced Urbanization
616(1)
Metropolises
616(1)
Megalopolises
617(1)
Megacities
617(1)
Megaregions
617(1)
U.S. Urban Patterns
617(4)
Uneven Urbanization
618(1)
Shifting Resources And Power Because Of Urban Migration
618(1)
Edge Cities
618(1)
Gentrification
619(2)
Changes In Suburbanization
621(1)
Models Of Urban Growth
621(3)
The Concentric Zone Model
621(1)
The Sector Model
622(1)
The Multiple-Nuclei Model
622(1)
The Peripheral Model
623(1)
Critique Of The Models
623(1)
City Life
624(3)
Alienation In The City
624(1)
Community In The City
625(1)
Slum Or Low-Rent Area?
625(1)
Who Lives In The City?
625(1)
The Cosmopolites
625(1)
The Singles
625(1)
The Ethnic Villagers
626(1)
The Deprived
626(1)
The Trapped
626(1)
Critique
626(1)
The Norm Of Noninvolvement And The Diffusion Of Responsibility
626(1)
Urban Problems And Social Policy
627(3)
Suburbanization
627(1)
City Versus Suburb
627(1)
Suburban Flight
628(1)
Tomorrow's Suburb
628(1)
Disinvestment And Deindustrialization
628(1)
The Potential Of Urban Revitalization
629(5)
Public Sociology
629(1)
Summary And Review
630(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 20
631(1)
21 Collective Behavior And Social Movements 632(28)
Collective Behavior
634(1)
Early Explanations: The Transformation Of People
634(2)
How Crowds Change People
634(1)
The Acting Crowd
635(1)
The Contemporary View: The Rationality Of The Crowd
636(2)
The Minimax Strategy
636(1)
Emergent Norms
636(1)
Bringing Emotions Back In
637(1)
How Sociologists Study Collective Behavior
637(1)
Forms Of Collective Behavior
638(8)
Riots
638(1)
Background Conditions
638(1)
Participants In Riots
638(1)
Rumors
639(2)
Panics
641(1)
The Humorous Panic
641(1)
Serious Panics
641(1)
Calm In The Midst Of Panic
642(1)
Mass Hysteria
642(2)
Moral Panics
644(1)
Fads And Fashions
645(1)
Urban Legends
646(1)
Social Movements
646(1)
Types And Tactics Of Social Movements
647(5)
Types Of Social Movements
647(2)
Tactics Of Social Movements
649(1)
Levels Of Membership
649(1)
The Publics
649(1)
Relationship To Authorities
650(1)
Propaganda And The Mass Media
650(2)
Gatekeepers To Social Movements
651(1)
Why People Join Social Movements
652(3)
Relative Deprivation Theory: Improving Status And Power
652(1)
Relativity Of Deprivation
652(1)
Relative Deprivation And The Civil Rights Movement
652(1)
Declining Privilege Theory: Protecting Status And Power
653(1)
Moral Issues And Ideological Commitment
653(2)
When Social Movements Pose A Threat To The Government
655(1)
On The Success And Failure Of Social Movements
655(3)
The Rocky Road To Success
655(1)
The Stages Of Social Movements
656(1)
Resurgence
656(2)
Multiple Realities And Social Movements
658(1)
Summary And Review
658(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 21
659(1)
22 Social Change And The Environment 660(28)
How Social Change Transforms Social Life
662(4)
The Four Social Revolutions
662(1)
From Gemeinschaft To Gesellschaft
662(1)
The Industrial Revolution And Capitalism
663(1)
Social Movements
664(1)
Conflict, Power, And Global Politics
664(2)
A Brief History Of Geopolitics
664(1)
G7 Plus
664(1)
Dividing Up The World
664(1)
Four Threats To This Coalition Of Powers
665(1)
The Growing Relevance Of Africa
666(1)
Theories And Processes Of Social Change
666(4)
Evolution From Lower To Higher
667(1)
Natural Cycles
667(1)
Conflict Over Power And Resources
667(1)
Ogburn's Theory
668(2)
Invention
668(1)
Discovery
669(1)
Diffusion
669(1)
Cultural Lag
669(1)
Evaluation Of Ogburn's Theory
669(1)
How Technology Is Changing Our Lives
670(8)
Extending Human Abilities
670(1)
The Sociological Significance Of Technology: How Technology Changes Social Life
671(1)
Changes In Production
671(1)
Changes In Worker-Owner Relations
671(1)
Changes In Ideology
671(1)
Changes In Conspicuous Consumption
672(1)
Changes In Family Relationships
672(1)
When Old Technology Was New: The Impact Of The Automobile
672(2)
Displacement Of Existing Technology
672(1)
Effects On Cities
673(1)
Changes In Architecture
673(1)
Changed Courtship Customs And Sexual Norms
673(1)
Effects On Women's Roles
673(1)
The New Technology: The Microchip And Social Life
674(3)
Computers In Education
674(1)
Computers In Business And Finance
675(1)
Computers In International Conflict
675(2)
Cyberspace And Social Inequality
677(1)
The Growth Machine Versus The Earth
678(8)
The Globalization Of Capitalism And The Race For Economic Growth
678(1)
A Sustainable Environment
678(1)
Environmental Problems And Industrialization
679(4)
Toxic Wastes
679(1)
Fossil Fuels And Climate Change
680(1)
The Energy Shortage And Internal Combustion Engines
681(1)
The Rain Forests
682(1)
The Environmental Movement
683(1)
Environmental Sociology
684(1)
Technology And The Environment: The Goal Of Harmony
685(1)
Summary And Review
686(1)
Thinking Critically About
Chapter 22
687(1)
Epilogue: Why Major in Sociology? 688
Glossary G-1
References R-1
Name Index N-1
Subject Index S-1
Credits CR-1